Martin Ravallion
Martin Ravallion is the Edmond D. Villani Professor of Economics at Georgetown University. Prior to this, he was the Director of the Development Research Group at the World Bank—the Bank’s research department. He has held various positions in the Bank since he joined as an Economist in 1988 and he has worked across multiple sectors and in all Bank regions. Prior to joining the Bank, Martin was on the faculty of the Australian National University (ANU). He holds a Ph.D. in economics from the London School of Economics (LSE), and has taught economics at LSE, Oxford University, the Australian National University, Princeton University and the Paris School of Economics. Martin’s main research interests over the last 25 years have concerned poverty and policies for fighting it. He is well-known for his work on measuring global poverty and for his work linking economic policies to the welfare of poor people, including the evaluation of anti-poverty programs. He has advised numerous governments and international agencies on these topics, and he has written extensively on them, including four books and over 200 papers in scholarly journals and edited volumes. Martin currently serves on the Editorial Boards of ten economics journals, is a Senior Fellow of the Bureau for Research in Economic Analysis of Development and a Founding Council Member of the Society for the Study of Economic Inequality. In 2011 he received the John Kenneth Galbraith Award of America’s Agricultural and Applied Economics Association.
- 05/13/13 Two Goals for Fighting Poverty
- 11/08/12 Should we care equally about poor people wherever they may live?
- 10/11/12 Recognizing and rewarding the best development professionals
- 06/20/12 Monitoring Inequality
- 03/26/12 Politically-filtered views on progress against poverty
- 03/08/12 Contradictions in Global Poverty Numbers?
- 03/07/12 Can we trust shoestring evaluations?
- 01/26/12 Do the Bank’s Operational Staff Support the Bank’s Research Department?
- 12/04/11 Do our development practitioners have an incentive to learn? And do they learn?
- 10/06/11 Development impact calls for knowledgeable development practitioners
- 09/25/11 Should you care about impact heterogeneity?
- 06/23/11 How can Zimbabwe avoid having the world’s worst Human Development Index?
- 04/18/11 What Does Adam Smith’s Linen Shirt Have to do with Global Poverty?
- 03/29/11 The Microfinance Mystery
- 01/28/11 New Brookings Study is Overly Optimistic on Progress Against Poverty
- 12/21/10 Talking development in two hundred years of books
- 10/12/10 Fighting Poverty at Each Stage of Development
- 09/29/10 Wholesaling Research for Development
- 03/05/10 Is African poverty falling?
- 07/07/09 Why Don't We See Poverty Rates Converging?
- “Validity of instruments” is not the issue here
- The art of deflection
- Scaling up
- Response: How should we measure capacity to redistribute
- Response to- Indeed I'm not claiming that
- Response to- Baffled by Ravallion's Emphasis
- Response
- Response
- Reply to comments
- Reply to Jishnu
- Reply to James Foster
- Reply to David Roodman
- Reply to Anis Dani
- Re: two questions
- Re: the Bank's poverty measurement
- Please look at what we actually do
- Mark Pitt's comment
- Gold standard and rigor
- Frequency of Poverty Data: A Reply to MJ
- For some interesting comments
- Debate continues on David Roodman's blog
- Andy, tThanks for the
- Adam, You have made a case
- A fact-checking challenge
